"Il Pozzo dei Dannati" è una trasmissione Heavy Metal in onda da Settembre a Luglio, sulle frequenze 104.0 di Radio Popolare Verona e in streaming su www.yastaradio.com. The Pit of the Damned is a heavy metal radio show on air on FM104.0 of Radio Popolare Verona and in streaming on www.yastaradio.com from September to July.

Horn is the kind of one-man black metal band that many of today's bedroom black metal blasters can take some inspiration and notes from. With the album 'Turm am Hang', which (as aptly illustrated on the cover) quite literally translates to 'Tower on the Slope', the old German mainstay of being as literal as possible is beautifully demonstrated alongside the forthright power of some dead-on exhilarating music. So far the title track is the only single of this album and has a great video of the process of illustrating the cover, but I'm sure that metal fans can easily understand why this reviewer believes there to be a striking series of superb songs on this album that can each be considered hits. Horn's matchless mind, Nerrath, has built a formidable structure, composed a captivating aesthetic, and etched it into an imposing black metal monolith.

The album opens with a dour long-winded sigh of a guitar melody that morphs into an intoxicating and inspiring sound. This uniquely frenzied approach is forcibly freed from the fetters of familiar forlorn folk pieces that bridge on banality as they endlessly echo each other. While most black metal accentuates the morose, Horn celebrates the beauty of the melancholy. Riffs revel in dissonant resonating guitars, proudly wailing in an anthemic obscurity, drawing the listener into pensive melodies that, in defiance of their frigid arrangements, become inspirational reveries with an upbeat percussive heat and beer hall style harmonic bliss. This is some after-the-battle beer drinking, fist pumping, headbanging black metal that's not all up its own ass about being cold, kvlt, and hiding in a cave. Instead Horn is celebrating another great evening in Valhalla surrounded by brethren in victory or defeat. Horn also lyrically appreciates nature and the forest, a common theme with many of this band's black metal contemporaries. The fury and structuring of each song puts the band closer on par to the likes of Drudkh and Waldgefluster as riffs round out with some folk and Celtic edges, smatterings of influences that enhance the echoes of fellowship and camaraderie without just repeating the same stances just so say he went there. “Verhallend in Landstrichen” is where you will experience the first major turn from a pair of songs that seemingly go their separate ways to a sound that builds an increasing energy flowing forth from the next three songs. As these pieces grow in intensity they keep a common rhythmic core with a correspondence from the treble issued throughout these marvelous four. The high water marks of 'Turm am Hang' happen in this series of songs where the chorus in “Totenraumer” is signaled by the toll of a bell, the Maidenesque opening of “Die mit dem Bogen auf dem Kreuz” becomes a headbanging hail to badass black metal, and “A(h)renschnitter” envelopes you in shredding melodies undulating around the robust snare hammering. This is an album that must be played live, loud, and to a very drunk crowd. It would be a privilege to see such a spectacle.

After a short interlude called “Lanz und Spiess”, a delirious and unusual track that sounds like the machinations of a restless mind sleeping off the delusions of the drink, the album closes with two strong but slower songs. Like awaking and setting off to task, “Bastion, im Seegang tauber Fels” wearily marches to a new position, forming up and stretching its martial rhythm in preparation for today's predestined practice. “The Sky Has Not Always Been This” sings of the rise and fall of civilizations, the birth and rebirth that humanity has always undergone while the soil underfoot was tread bare by man's ambition. There is some interesting and well-thought arrangement in these songs, some experimentation with different concepts, and a keen ear for production quality throughout Horn's 'Turm am Hang'. While most one-man bedroom black metallers would be quick to describe loneliness, Horn creates a unifying atmosphere throughout the meat of this album. This is a welcome difference to the style of this branch of black metal that has carved out a unique notch in the overall musical tree. (Five_Nails)

giovedì 26 gennaio 2017

Count
me in as pretty impressed. Rudra made a big impression on me on
'Kurukshetra'? Think it was that one. Back then I was an 18 year old
belatedly getting into extreme metal who was blown away by just how
different it sounded. These days I'm much harder to please, but to my
surprise, I found myself digging this album just as much.

I
reckon the obvious comparison here would be Nile. I mean they don't
exactly sound all that alike, but Rudra's thrashing, often death-ing
metal has a lot of similar hallmarks- namely a dedication to going for
exactly one and one vibe only, fascination with a bunch of old, dusty
things and a tendency to use the same scale over and over again. The
ancient, mystical culture they're trying to invoke is just a bit further
east, that's all.

And they're really good at it. It's
arguably a team effort - the guitarist throws out a lot of pretty
decent riffs - but it's really a percussion and vocal based thing. The
vocals - this big midranged snarling thing, growling away in a bunch of
languages and really adding a powerful, rich, very fierce vibe to
proceedings. There's this tendency in tracks like "Hermit in
Nididhysana" for him to get into a fairly repetitive, ritualistic mood
and it's freakin' great. All up it's those moments - much of "Hermit",
the epic closer and "Roots of Misapprehension" to pick a few examples -
where Rudra are at their finest. They can do fairly decent, crunchy
death metal but it's when the drums start getting increasingly off beat
and things get a bit trancey that the band takes off and things get
really fun.

There's a few nit-picky criticisms,
perhaps - the production could certainly be a bit beefier, and the bass
is reduced to a rumbling somewhere in the distance, and a few of the
riffs, particularly earlier in the album, are a bit weak. I really like
this album, but you certainly get the feeling that if Rudra just went a
bit more off the deep end - a few more far-out parts, and perhaps a more
intense riffset at times - then you'd really have an all-time band on
our hands.

As it stands though, I'm still playing this
regularly a month or so after the initial promo download, which says a
lot. Well worth your time, 'Enemy of Duality' is definitely a quality
album. (Caspian Yurisich)

mercoledì 25 gennaio 2017

Formed in 2009, Massachusetts metallers Olÿphant were originally conceived as a classic metal cover band before quickly moving on to writing original music that brings a classic metal with doom and stoner influences to prog and thrash elements alongside. Basically dripping with sprawling, mid-tempo dirges, the album’s main focus becomes quite clear early on with the ability to effortlessly shift from these wide-ranging elements as there’s a strong showing of spindly, galloping heavy metal, swirling stoner riff-work and plodding, oppressive doom rhythms that all come together here. This wide-ranging set of influences creates a wide-ranging sense of free-flowing and unpredictable work, never really journeying through the expected realms of the genres in order to continually warp themselves into a finely-tuned effort that’s quite enjoyable when it drops these vastly-varying elements into the journey without warning. At times, though, that does the album a slight disservice as this rarely manages to feel like it shifts all that cohesively, being essentially a wide-ranging hodgepodge of influential elements coming together to create a seemingly jarring and discordant array of tracks without a singular connecting vibe between any of it, and is an issue to contend with as the band carries on. Efforts like ‘Brown Jenkin,’ ‘Incidents in the Butterfly Garden’ and ‘The Expedition’ offer up the most nominal and enjoyable variations of the style, featuring these elements coming together into a stylistic whole to be the highlight tracks on the album. The multi-faceted ‘The Grey Havens (To the Sea)’ offers a fine look at these elements shifting continuously throughout it’s epic passages that makes for quite a winding journey, while ‘Before the Fall’ abandons the vast majority of what came before in order to turn into a raging speed-metal mosher. Still, this isn’t that problematic of an effort and still has a lot to like. (Don Anelli)

giovedì 12 gennaio 2017

Croatian symphonic power metal newcomers AngelSeed have struggled with numerous lineup changes over the years as the band’s complex arrangements and vast array of influences have kept the band in check throughout the years. Forging forward with these elements, the band is quite adept at their style here which manages to interject so many rather strong and dynamic elements that range from operatic vocals, soaring cinematic orchestrations that generate the kind of power and bombastic grandiosity present there to heavy, thumping riffing alongside the straightforward riffing which is quite a great backbone of attack which generates quite a lot to like here. The fact that it’s not as intense and driving as the vast majority of the genre’s practitioners for the full-on album as they prefer to stay in the mid-tempo chugging realm and offer complex arrangements rather than indulge in those overt speed-drenched numbers might make this a somewhat clashing tone for some but otherwise isn’t all that flawed since the consistency and tone makes up a lot of that. The three ballads might be overkill, but the tracks are still enjoyable enough. First effort ‘Bloodfield’ gets this going with moody atmospherics and pounding drumming that propels this along at a steady pace as the operatic elements coming to pass throughout the swirling keyboards leading into the finale for a decent-enough start. ‘Dancing with the Ghosts’ offers heavy, thumping rhythms and harmonious leads that bring about the controlled Gothic-flavored outbursts while chugging along to the strong rhythms as the mid-tempo patterns keep this one flowing nicely into the final half for another strong offering. Their first ballad ‘Man with Black Roses’ drops off into softer rhythms with a more relaxed tempo that still retains some solid atmospheric keyboards amid the simple strumming and romantic vibe that runs continuously throughout here for a rather nice attempt at the style without really doing much else. ‘Forever Blind’ returns to the forefront of heavy, chugging patterns and utterly frenzied patterns that blast along at more traditional speed-drenched rhythms and bombastic drumming throughout the finale that makes for a standout highlight track. Second ballad ‘Leaving All Behind’ offers even softer and more romantic patterns with simplistic elements and orchestral patterns that brings the keyboards to the forefront against the guitars as the gentle rhythms continue on for a much more engaging and up-tempo effort than the previous effort. ‘Fallen Angel’ and ‘Schizo-head’ tread into the cinematic realm with surging keyboards and simple mid-tempo riffing that relies more on dramatic arrangements as the pounding rhythms and harmonious cinematic melodies make for fun and rather engaging efforts. ‘Dreamer / Breaking Dawn’ mixes the ballad and mid-tempo crunch styles nicely with soft, gentle melodies and dramatic arrangements that contain romantic rhythms alongside the bombastic keyboards which is nice but does feel way too dragged out at it’s current length. ‘Soulcollector’ brings some electronic influences into the dramatic cinematic rhythms and pounding arrangements as the crushing riff-work and swirling keyboards combine into a fine operatic whole for a rather enjoyable offering. ‘The Healer’ offers the heaviest variation yet with the faster rhythms and thumping patterns offering plenty of cinematic-styled outbursts alongside the softer, gentle melodies and simple keyboards only with a lessened impact against the driving orchestral rhythms for a rather enjoyable offering. Finally, the final ballad and album-closer ‘Now’ uses the soft strumming and gentle melodies for a romantic guide through the solid rhythms and engaging vocal melodies that carries on into the final half for a solid if completely inappropriate lasting impression that drops this a notch. Otherwise, this here is a solid addition to the genre overall. (Don Anelli)